It Was Just An Innocent “Check In”

Mr. Points Traveler and I survived the first year of marriage, and to celebrate we decided to spend a night together in NYC. We started off by seeing Cinderella on Broadway, followed by a delicious Cuban dinner and sangria before heading back to our Times Square hotel. Before heading to bed, I peeked out the window and “checked in” on Foursquare and Instagramed a photo of the view from the room.

Like most bloggers, I’m pretty active on social media and always have been. I use Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram daily, and I set up a Foursquare account a few years ago in order to “unlock” some Foursquare/AmEx offers. I pop into Foursquare every now and then to “check in”. I sometimes link my Foursquare account to Twitter and Facebook as well. It’s all innocent.

At around 1 in the morning, my room phone rang. I was in a sleepy haze. On the other line was someone who introduced themselves as a hotel front desk employee responding to a “noise complaint” coming from one of the rooms nearby. He asked to verify my room number (which I didn’t), and when I told him “we’re sleeping”, he responded “who is ‘we’? Aren’t you alone?”. At that point I was uncomfortable, and I told him that my husband’s name was already added to the reservation; if he wanted to further talk about this, then he could send security to the room. The caller then made some dirty and offensive comments, and I knew I had been pranked.

I immediately called the front desk, and I was told that they had transferred an outside call to my room. A part of me was a little ticked off about that, because in the past, when I’ve received an outside call to my room, I had a hotel employee say “so and so called and asked to be connected to your room, do you accept?”. I have since learned that many hotels do not screen outside calls, period. I think this is a policy that should be changed given how easy it is to find someone nowadays.

As a woman who frequently travels alone and with friends, what happened last night was disturbing to me. What’s even more unsettling is this is not the first time something like this has happened to me.

I rarely share this story, partially because I am embarrassed that I did not tell security when it happened, but I figured this fits right into the tone of this post.

A few years ago, I was staying at a popular Los Angeles hotel and enjoying myself with tapas in the lobby. After paying my tab, a well dressed gentleman tried to talk to me on my way to the elevator. He then gets in and says, “I’m thinking about staying here tonight, how are the rooms?” I politely said, “they’re fine.”

He then asks me if I could take him to my room to “show him”. I said no, and immediately pressed a button to a floor that was not mine. I stopped talking to him, and he then says “look, you need to loosen up, I am going to give you a shoulder rub. Right here.” He moved in closer to me. Thankfully the doors opened at that point, and I darted back into the lobby.

I should have told security, but I didn’t.

After the creepy phone call last night, I reminded myself of the Los Angeles creeper. Traveling alone is one of my favorite things to do because it is both liberating and comforting, but it’s important to take precautions and learn lessons from my mistakes.

Like most bloggers, I am so used to candidly sharing my whereabouts. And I know this has happened to some other BA bloggers as well. Flying With Fish blogged about a similar situation last year, and because of his incident, he stopped using Foursquare all together. I also recall something like this happening to Lucky (One Mile at a Time).

I’ve spent some time thinking of ways to prevent these types of things from happening again, and I hope these tips can help someone else in the future.

Learn from my mistakes:

Be cautious with how you use social media: From now on, I will be more cautious when it comes to “checking in”. In the past I have “checked in” to a hotel if I was with friends at the lobby bar (sometimes that even unlocks drink specials), but never again will I share my actual hotel location.

Refrain from using your real name: In general, I am a happy-go-lucky person, and I like to believe that the world is my best friend. I use my first and last name on my social media accounts because I’ve never had an issue like this before. Now, I think it would be best to avoid doing that so liberally.

Tell the hotel to deny calls to your room from outside callers: In this day in age, it’s very easy to stay connected to friends and family as it is, so calling hotel rooms seems to be on the brink of extinction. I’ll tell the people I care about to contact me in other ways instead of via my hotel room.

Designate a code word or pseudonym: If you don’t want to deny outside callers, provide the front desk with one of these that a caller must say in order to get connected to you.

Hang up and call back: If someone calls your room claiming to be a hotel employee, say that you’d love to hang up and call them back directly to continue talking.

Toss away your room key sleeve: As soon as you check in, take your keys and discard your room card sleeve that often contains your last name and room number.

Disable “geotagging”: Did you know that when you post on social media, your location information is often shared publicly? For example, on Instagram, your photos get stored on a “map” where anyone can zoom in and see exactly where photos were taken.

About Angelina Aucello

Comments

It is quite disturbing how easy it is to find information like this. At a recent legal conference a speaker used social media (Instagram/Facebook/Twitter/Foursquare) to show the audience how much she could learn about a random conference attendee in a few clicks, and eventually pinpointed the person to where they were having lunch in the conference building. Stay safe and thanks for the great blog!

Excellent points Angelina, im glad you were not alone. As I am in a similar situation I always try not to share much on social media or if I do I neverl share the location intil I have checked out.
I Don’t use Foursquare bit this is definitely creepy and I will not ever use it, unless it is an Amex bonus. :)

I am so lucky considering some of the crazy and very stupid things I’ve done when traveling and making friends. I agree that, more than ever, its important to be cautious, and also to trust your gut. If a person or circumstance doesn’t feel right, it probably isn’t.

I never post on Facebook or Twitter that I will be out of town if my home will be unoccupied. It is so tempting to share my travels with FB friends in real time, but I just don’t do it until I am home safe and sound.

Thanks for sharing your story. I have had several scary encounters at hotels too and once the front desk agent was fired for allowing a creep get my room number (I was so scared I left at 11 pm and drove 4 hours to get home).

One does not necessarily need to use social media. Sometimes just checking in to the hotel is enough.

On many trips to China, I would routinely get a phone call after midnight asking if I wanted a “friend” for the night. You know, a full service “friend” from the spa (usually a very young, cute girl barely 20).

At one US-branded hotel in Beijing, I would get “business cards” slid under my door with pictures of what sort of business they were in.

I have had a scammer call while at a hotel and say they were the front desk and the computers died and they need my credit card number again. I said I would come down to the desk and of course there was nothing wrong. The guy called back while I was at the front desk and said he was my brother I think. I should have complained more. I am sure they were calling multiple people in the hotel and asking for room numbers instead of people’s names.

Yikes! When I saw that exact photo on Instagram yesterday (and knowing q reasonable number of the hotels right around Times Square), I was pretty sure I knew where you were staying. But didn’t even occur to me that someone would use that info nefariously. Good reminder to be careful online. Glad it didn’t turn into anything but a prank, but not cool. On the other hand, I guess you know you’ve made it when people care enough to prank you! ;-)

Yikes! I have never had anything like this happen to me, but I often do wonder about how to handle situations when I am traveling. If I blog that I am out traveling somewhere, then doesn’t that signal that my house is empty? (not always the case, but still)

Its pretty simple. Make a fake foursquare account for offers and keep your social networking on lockdown. My facebook profile is limited to my friends. If you are a public outsider, you can see a couple of my profile pictures. That’s about it.

Instagram mystify me. Why someone should post picture to get approval from strangers makes no sense to me. Just share your photos on facebook. Or are people too lazy to post albums on facebook.

Gladly this has never happened to me. I think the best way to avoid this is to create an online nickname. I think it’s great that you use your real name but doing so will make these types of scenarios possible.
To be honest, I’m not quite surprised this happened to you since, let’s face it, you’re very pretty & hot! I know I’m being discriminatory here but I doubt this ever happens to bloggers who aren’t as beautiful as you. I may be wrong but simply judging from your photo, I can see guys always hitting on you and for those who are obsessed, make prank calls at night and “moves” in the elevator. What those guys did were wrong and disrespectful & I hope this never happens again to you nor do these types of actions deter you from blogging.

Can’t you just uncheck a setting, at least for Foursquare/Swarm, such as “Include me in the public list of people who are currently checked in at a venue”? I assume this would allow you to continue to enjoy 4sq without making your checkins public…

This is so scary! I use foursquare for everything. I do have my privacy set up where only my friends can see where I am and for that specific social media app I really only add real friends. I dont even have it linkde with my facebook or Twitter. But after reading this now I’m starting to rethink. Thank you for sharing.

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